Round Ireland with a Fridge by Tony Hawks


Round Ireland with a Fridge
Title : Round Ireland with a Fridge
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0312274920
ISBN-10 : 9780312274924
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 248
Publication : First published January 1, 1997

Have you ever made a drunken bet? Worse still, have you ever tried to win one? In attempting to hitchhike round Ireland with a fridge, Tony Hawks did both, and his foolhardiness led him to one of the best experiences of his life. Joined by his trusty traveling companion-cum-domestic appliance, he made his way from Dublin to Donegal, from Sligo through Mayo, Galway, Clare, Kerry, Cork, Wexford, Wicklow--and back again to Dublin. In their month of madness, Tony and his fridge met a real prince, a bogus king, and the fridge got christened. They surfed together, entered a bachelor festival, and one of them had sex without the other knowing. And unexpectedly, the fridge itself became a momentary focus for the people of Ireland.

An international bestseller, Round Ireland with a Fridge is a classic travel adventure in the tradition of Bill Bryson with a dash of Dave Barry.


Round Ireland with a Fridge Reviews


  • Jan-Maat

    This is deeply, thoroughly OK, middle of the road inoffensive book, unless you are a fridge, in which case you will probably not approve of being moved around the countryside. Fridges like to settle down. They are naturally homebodies. Movement can cause bubbles in their coolant tubes which is generally bad news.

    So this is one of those gently amusing books arising from somebody deciding to do something stupid for a bet. Had Hawks tried to do this in a less prosperous part of the world a good part of the narrative would have been concerned with attempting to rescue the fridge as it was repeatedly stolen or impounded for alleged customs violations.

    However for reasons possibly not even known to the author, but alcohol may have been involved, he got involved in a discussion that terminated in the assertion that Irish people were so nice, what with that natural tendency to good natured kindliness of theirs, it would be possible to hitch-hike round Ireland with a fridge. Now that duelling is currently illegal, this is the kind of assertion that can only be proven in one way.

    You may, particularly if you are from Ireland, find this book to be condescending in that it is based on the belief that Ireland is a wondrous country full of good natured people up for helping somebody out to win a ridiculous bet. You may on the other hand notice that the fridge is small enough to sit on a bar stool which I suspect was an important factor. The book written about the attempt to hitch-hike round Ireland with a mega-fridge imported from the USA, or one of those giant contraptions from the 1950s would be longer and filled with more cursing. As it is this the kind of book that the Irish Tourist Board should probably be surreptitiously promoting. Good for a wet afternoon.

  • Claire

    Completely ridiculous and fun. A British man drunkenly accepts a 100 pound bet that he can't circumnavigate Ireland while hitchhiking with a small fridge (which ends up costing him 130 pounds). It's heartening to see all the people who help him out and really get behind his quest. Hawks has a real gift for laugh-out-loud funny writing. And there's something moving about the whole journey, too--the insight that can come from doing things that are a bit silly. Makes you want to find a household appliance and head out on the open road.

  • thefourthvine

    This is a gimmick travel book, and the gimmick is awesome: the author made a bar bet that he could travel around Ireland with a fridge. And by "travel," I mean "hithchike."

    Unfortunately, that's the funniest part of the book. The rest of it - I got the feeling the author hadn't quite settled into his narrative voice in a written medium; much of it sounded like the kind of prolonged story that'd be hilarious if someone told it to you while you were having a couple of drinks with him. That doesn't really make for a book, though.

    Ultimately, this is a forgettable book with an unforgettable concept.

  • Matt

    This guy's funny. But ridiculous.

    It reminds me of my travels from when I was in college, when much of the excitement was a direct result of me and my friends being stupid and broke, and consequently everything around us goes wrong. And all of us wishing we were getting laid.

    Tony Hawks is basically all of those things. Except he's probably still a little less broke, a smidge more competent, and a whole lot funnier than your average idiot on a college road trip. The premise, of course, is that Hawks was drunk enough to accept a bet that he couldn't travel the perimeter of Ireland in a month with a refrigerator, and he was foolish enough to follow through with the bet once he was sober again.

    The big plus in all of this is that our hero, the author, does get picked up and hosted by a lot of good local characters, and he does manage to pepper his writing with some very nice reflections on the surrounding culture. And it's a very easy read.

  • Paul O’Neill

    This was a fairly entertaining book which does exactly what it says on the tin. Lots of laughs included and Hawks personality certainly shines through.

    Having been to Ireland myself, I can certainly appreciate the craic!

    It's not going to change your life but still worth the read about an entirely unique and wacky bet!

  • Heather

    Read this book years ago and really enjoyed it, just finished the audio book read by the fridge man himself. Still very funny and interesting to hear the story from the storyteller.

  • Shawn Mooney (Shawn The Book Maniac)

    One drunken night, somebody wagers that Tony Hawks, a British comedian, can't or won't hitchhike around Ireland with a fridge in tow. Wrong! He does so, as the title of this comic travel memoir makes clear, which is hilarious.

    Unfortunately, there isn't much more hilarity once you get past the title. There's an amusing encounter with Prince Charles in a rope line, which I'll long remember. And to be clear, Tony Hawks did crack me up approximately a dozen times. Really cracked me up. But a dozen laughs over the course of an otherwise deeply unfunny, ploddingly dull 250-page book qualifies as a bomb.

    My advice: smile at the narrative embedded in the title and skip the book.

  • Dan

    I read this in school because I thought it was the skateboard guy, it was alright

  • Paul

    Generally interesting enough , quirky and cheeky in many ways.
    I think a lot of the humour didnt work for me but may do for those reading it from a non Irish view point. Things that may seem a bit mad to some all felt very mundane to me so didn't grab me really.
    Still a fun enough book and an interesting look at what people will do if they hear about something going on on the radio.

  • Kim

    The touching tale of a man and his fridge, this is the story of English comedian Tony Hawks who, for a £100 bet, hitch-hikes around Ireland in one month with a fridge.

    This book really shows the good of people and the lengths some will go to to help someone else with no thought of reward. It's sad to think that this sort of thing would increasingly be harder to accomplish as people turn more inwards and less likely to help one another.

    At times laugh out loud funny and at other times philosophical this book is a great read. The only downside was that it felt a bit rushed the whole way and I would have liked to have heard more about the people who went out of their way for Tony and the fridge.

  • Aj Sterkel

    You know that tiny voice in your head that tells you to DNF a book? The voice that constantly reminds you that life’s too short to read bad stories? I really need to learn to listen to that voice.

    Round Ireland with a Fridge is the memoir of British comedian Tony Hawks. I’d never heard of Tony Hawks (maybe because I’m not British), but the book sounded delightfully pointless. I’m always up for a good idiotic adventure. Also, I’d love to go to Ireland someday. I thought I could live vicariously through the book.

    “The more foolish, illogical or surreal one's actions were perceived to be (and mine surely fell into one of these categories), the wider the arms of hospitality were opened in salutation.” – Round Ireland with a Fridge


    The story starts with Tony waking up hungover and discovering a note from his friend. While they were drunk the night before, the friend bet Tony 100 Pounds that he couldn’t hitchhike around the circumference of Ireland with a refrigerator. Tony didn’t want to lose a bet that he didn’t remember making, so he bought a mini fridge (which cost 130 Pounds), and set off around Ireland. I assumed that hilarity would ensue.

    It didn’t. The memoir is extremely slow and repetitive. It’s about a guy with a bad hangover who spends a month dragging a fridge from pub to pub in Ireland. In the process, he goes surfing and has sex in a doghouse. That’s it. At first the adventure is amusing, but there are only so many stories of Stupid Things Drunk Strangers Do In Bars that I can take. I quickly stopped caring about Tony and his fridge. I know that the point of his journey was to be pointless, but I just got angry at him. He gets to spend a month in Ireland. He chooses to spend it getting drunk. You can get drunk anywhere in the world. At least do something mildly interesting on your trip!

    I didn’t click with Tony’s personality. He’s a comedian, but I didn’t find him funny. He’s condescending to the Irish people, and it’s a blow to his ego when they don’t recognize him as the “Fridge Man.” Most of his rides are the result of being on a radio show. He complains when he actually has to hitchhike. He also likes to pick out his “favorite” girl at a pub and hit on her relentlessly, even if she’s there with a date. Tony is probably nice in real life, but in the book, he comes across as an entitled, conceited person. I didn’t understand his humor. Maybe he’s trying to be self-deprecating?

    I do completely agree with this quote, though:

    “I'm against the death penalty. I believe that it is a mistake to show that killing people is wrong by killing people. However I'm not against the random killing of people who snore.” – Round Ireland with a Fridge


    This book wasn’t for me. I would have saved myself a lot of disappointment if I had listened to my instincts and taken it back to the used bookstore instead of forcing myself to finish it.

  • Beth

    This book was awesome-- it's soo the type of travelogue I love to read. The title alone is enough to make you want to read it (and the cover, as tattered as it may be), but the premise behind his quest really hooked me. I read this book in about 2 days, and can honestly say that there wasn't a boring part to be found. In fact, I found myself laughing out loud at some of the people and situations he encountered, or just the way he described them. He's definitely got a way with humor, which I'm sure lended to my enjoyment of the story :) Also throw in that Ireland is a beautiful and enchanting country (I recognized many of the locations from my visit to Ireland a few years ago), and that the Irish are an amusing and lovely culture -- and I was smitten with his story :) Overall, this book was definitely a thumbs up for a traveler such as as myself -- but I can see how many different people would enjoy reading this. It's just too funny and quirky NOT to love it :)

  • Michael

    What happens when you make a stupid bet while drunk at a bar? If you are anything like Tony Hawks, you actually try to win the bet. With £100 at stake, Tony Hawks decides to hitchhike around Ireland with a fridge (even though buying the fridge cost him £130). Round Ireland with a Fridge is a travel memoir about the adventures Tony Hawks had with his fridge.

    First of all, it is important to point out that Tony Hawks is a British comedian and is not to be confused with the skateboarder. While he is best known for his travel memoirs, Hawks first claim to fame was as the lead of the comedy band Morris Minor and the Majors, which had a hit with a Beastie Boys parody in 1988. He is also a voice actor, most notable for voicing a vending machine and a suitcase in Red Dwarf.

    This book starts off with Tony Hawks talking about how he doesn’t spend much time drinking or going to bars. Then for the entire novel he drinks in bars as he hitchhikes around Ireland. Putting aside this huge contradiction this book is actually very entertaining and manages to captivate the audience for its 246 pages. Travelling from Dublin to Donegal, from Sligo through Mayo, Galway, Clare, Kerry, Cork, Wexford, Wicklow–and back again to Dublin this a story of the people he meets along the way.

    The fridge actually become more of an asset that Tony Hawks originally expected, helping him get rides, free accommodation and even pick up woman. Even the fridge had its own adventures; it was christened by a nun and even went surfing. While this may seem like a gimmick you will find some interesting philosophical thoughts on people and life as Tony Hawks reflects on all the experiences he had with his fridge.

    I had a lot of fun with this book and I am so glad to have read it. There were so many laugh out loud moments (I especially enjoyed Hawks views on marathons) and still offered plenty to think about. As a travel memoir I expected something like Bill Bryson and while the comedy is there I think there was more opportunity to teach people about Ireland and its culture. Highly recommend this book and I plan to seek out Playing the Moldovans at Tennis so I can dip back into Tony Hawks writing again.

    This review originally appeared on my blog:
    http://www.knowledgelost.org/book-rev...

  • Maria

    It was ok, but I expected much more of a book about a journey around Ireland.
    There were some parts that made me laugh, though; it's a light reading.
    (I spent 3 weeks in Ireland in 1995, I didn't hitchhiked - I travelled mostly by bus - but I think my journey was much more interesting than his as I went to many interesting places other than just local pubs...)

  • Saurabh Kadam

    It is one of the funniest books I read which is on travel but not on travel. I would say this is the book for the people. British comedian Tony Hawks (not a skateboarder) took a drunken bet with his friends to circumnavigate Ireland. This was one of the books from Hank Green's list to read.
    Round Ireland with a fridge is a book on people where people in Ireland on how people helped this hitchhiker to complete his journey. Tony's rant is what makes the book enjoyable. He and his fridge philosophy are mindblowing throughout the whole book.
    Tony and his fridge become items of the curious case in ireland. There are many funny moments in this book like a baptism of the fridge in the church from some nun. It is literally a bang for the buck.
    If you are fan of audiobook there is an audiobook version by Tony Hawks himself.

  • Andrea

    What a fun book about a guy who lost a bet and thus hitch-hiked around Ireland with a fridge. (A true story.) I don't think I've ever laughed out loud as much as I did with this book. My only "complaint" would be that there wasn't enough info about the actual cities that he visited--I would have liked to learn more. The focus was really on the people, friendships and pubs. Definitely a fun read though if you're into travel books and can see the humor in hitch-hiking around Ireland with a fridge!

  • B. Kennedy

    Charming.

  • Patricia Ferguson

    This was a fun read. The title captured my interest and the interest of each person I shared the title with. I enjoyed the writing style and the photo evidence. Touring Ireland has moved up on my bucket list.

  • Heather

    So I officially don't care about this man or his fridge. I've been trying to get through this book for a couple of months now. I finally listed it on Goodreads because I thought it would give me an incentive to finish it. But it's just not happening.

    I think the problem is that each chapter is basically the same. TH has his bet to travel around Ireland with a fridge facilitated by a radio show that's following his story. So it's really not as wacky and visionary as it sounds -- more like a stunt than, I don't know, some kind of quixotic journey of self-discovery. (Not that I would have necessarily liked that any better.) Every time he gets to a new place, he then goes to the local pub and meets the local characters. This isn't a bad way to travel, but it doesn't make for the most interesting reading. But mostly, I'm just not that into TH. He's probably a great guy, but I'm having trouble connecting and since the book is JUST him (and a revolving cast of characters who the reader never gets to know because TH is constantly moving on to the next ride and the next B&B and the next pub; and the fridge, which doesn't talk), if you don't REALLY like TH, there's no point in sticking around.

  • Emily Klepperich

    This book written by the British author/comedian Tony Hawks, not the American Skateboarder Tony Hawks,and is a hilarious adventure into the Republic of Ireland where the odder you appear to be, the more you are embraced by its people.

    Round Ireland with a Fridge is a true story, about Tony Hawks who took a bet that he could travel around the Republic of Ireland with a fridge, only by hitchhiking within one calendar month. The bet being for 100 pounds. However, the tale is that much more hilarious when the fridge ends up costing him 130 pounds. The ridiculousness that ensues within this book is fantastic for giving anyone who chooses to read it a well deserved lift! No pun intended.

    This lighthearted, true story is one that will keep you laughing, but will leave you contemplating Tony's journey as a metaphor for your own life. Worth a read and very enjoyable!

  • Dan Domme

    "The more foolish, illogical, or surreal one's actions were perceived to be (and mine surely fell into one of these categories), the wider the arms of hospitality were opened in salutation."

    Tony Hawks knows how to make you laugh, even when you don't want to. I've earned my fair share of strange looks after I burst out with a chuckle at this book. In the first pages of recounting how the sordid wager to travel around Ireland with fridge in tow came about, Hawks paints a picture of the bizarre. Once revisited by the end of the journey, though, it seems remarkably less so. One starts to wonder why the rest of the world can't be like the quaint places that Hawks visited, where absurdity, pointlessness, and doing things for the heck of it are things to be admired and welcomed.

  • Lindsey

    I wouldn't intially have read this had it not been picked as a 'bookclub' read because I was imagining a less funny version of a Danny Wallace book - I like Danny Wallace so didn't think this would come up to scratch but it did in a slightly more subtle way...found myself laughing out loud on page one which was a good sign and continued to have a good chuckle throughout the book - I thought the author had a really good way with words, some witty observations and it kept me entertained. Would be a good holiday 'beside the pool' read and a book I will probably find myself recommending to other people.

  • Деница Райкова

    Тони Хоукс - "Около Ирландия с хладилник", изд. "Фабер" 2019, прев. Зорница Христова

    Преди около два месеца реших да предприема "книжна обиколка" на Ирландия. Тоест - да отделя известно време за четене само на ирландски автори... или поне на книги, свързани с Ирландия. Направих го с автори като Мария Еджуърт, Франк О'Конър, Джон Макгахърн, Джейн Ъркхарт, Себастиан Бари и Шавон Доуд. Всеки от тях ми показа различно "лице" на Ирландия и различни периоди от нейнатта история.И слеед всичко това дойде ред на най-съвременната книга от цялато ми "ирландска колекция". Която не случайно си пазех за накрая, защото авторът прави неещо, за което аз отдавна си мечтая, но вероятно никога няма да успея. А именно: обикаля цяла Ирландия.
    Дотук - нищо необичайно, ще кажете. Много са тия, дето мятат една раница на гръб и тръгват да обикалят. Ей така, за кеф. Понеже не обичат да седят на едно място. Може даже и сред вас да има таккива.
    Обаче!
    Колко от вас биха потеглиили на път /пътувайки на автостоп/ само защото са се хванали на пиянски бас, че ще обиколят цяла една страна "в компанията" на домакински електроуред? Защото Тони Хоукс прави точно това. Сега - дори да се хванете на подобен бас в не съэвсем трезво състояние, като изтрезнеете, веднага ще се отметнете. Като всеки разумен човек. Да, ама не. Защото Хоукс е англиичанин, джентълмеен /сега, мога да споря дали всички англиичани са джентълмени, но не ми е това идеята/ и не се отмята от дадена дума. Без значение за колко идиотска идея става въпрос. И така поема на щуро пътуване. При съответните условия, уговорени с майтапчията, предложил баса. С наивнната идея, че тия условия ще послужат като един вид застраховка... и съответното заричане, че за нищо, ама за нищо на света няма да стъпи вв една определена територия.
    Хората са си го казали: "Никога не казвай "никога".
    Добре, обаче когато предприема щурата си обиколка около Ирландия с хладилник, англичаннинът Тони Хоукс явно не знае това. Или го е забравил.
    Защото уточнявайки маршрута на обиколкатта, поставя условие, че няма да минава през Северна Ирландия. Човекът просто го е страх. /С право, бих добавила аз./ Годината е 1997, преди мирното споразумение.
    И понеже се е зарекъл, естествено, съдбата се погрижва да го натресе точно там. И да го "прекара" през цели три от шестте северноирланндски графства. Две от които - известни като най-бунтовните в страната - Арма и Тайроун /разберете се най-сетне как се пише това име на б��лгарски - дотук знам 4 варианта, и за пръв път виждам изписан на български този, който смятам за правилен!/ Да минеш с хладилник през такава територия си е страшничко - току-виж, някой го сметнал за бомба.
    И както си чета, значи, подскачам от изненада, защото се споменава едно... градче, селце, наречете го, както искате, според данни отпреди няколко години има между 500 и 1000 жители, но си има също църква, колеж и футболен отбор. - за чието съществууване научих преди година и нещо и оттогава се опитвам да налучкам как се пише името му на български. Днес съвсем случайно разбрах - и ако си мислите: "Голяма работа", ето го името на ирландски: Aughnacloy. /Честно, това име ми промени представите за "непроизносима дума".
    По време на пътуването си Тони се запознава с много хора, неведнъж бива буквално спасяван от немислими ситуации. При това - от непознати хора, които може и да смятат идеята му за безумна, н инаги проявяват доброта, топлина и гостопремство.
    Честно казано, ако очаквате да научите от тази книга повече за природата или бита на Ирландия, може малко да се разочаровате. Сцените, свързани с "бита", се разиграват най-вече в кръчми, и по страниците се "лее" доста "Гинес". Но пък повечето от хората, с които се слеща Тони, са забавни и колоритни и с чудесно чувство за хумор.И готови да ппиемат дори един англичанин като "свой" в мига, щом научат за щурата му идея. Може да не получите безкрайни природни описания или исторически отклонения, но пък за смветка на това ще получите свежа и наистина забавна история.
    Краят се размина малко с очакванията ми, но пък от друга страна, в няккои отношения ми хареса повече един градиозен финал. Затваряйки последната страница, си мислех, че мчно такава книга - забавна, свежа, щура. Хареса ми. Много. И макар рядко да препоръчвам ккниги, с тази го правя. Мисля, че наистина ще се забавлявате с нея.
    А аз ще помисля кое да е следващото ми четиво.

  • Madhulika Liddle

    On a brief trip to Ireland, Tony Hawks was driving down a country road with a friend when the two of them saw a hitchhiker, accompanied by a full-sized refrigerator. Some years later, at a party where the liquor was flowing freely, Hawks mentioned that long-ago incident to a friend, who was as sozzled as Hawks was. A bet was made: his friend bet £100 that Hawks wouldn't be able to hitchhike round Ireland with a fridge.

    A lot has to be said for Hawks's tenacity—and more, for his love of the ridiculous—when it transpires that in the cold light of day, now sober, he decided he would take up the challenge. With a small fridge, and with one concession allowed by his friend: instead of hitchhiking along the entire circumference of Ireland, he would merely go to the northernmost, southernmost, easternmost and westernmost points of the country.

    Thus began a journey in which Hawks didn't just get to see Ireland, he also forged friendships with an astonishing array of strangers. He met a king, participated in a 'Bachelors Night' do, probably came close to where some snipers were holed up, and became something of a celebrity on local radio. The fridge became an icon in its own right, achieving things not even all humans end up doing.

    I started off this book with no real expectations, and was soon laughing my head off. Hawks is delightfully funny (and punny) at times; sample this:

    "... and so I was bounced along Donegal's roads at excessive speed to meet my TV crew, or if it pre-empted it, my maker."

    Or this:

    "Seamus had wanted to perform a humorous song, and had asked me to come up with something that would 'set it apart' from the other mundane entries. In the event, what would set it apart would be a quite significant drop in standard."

    There are some absolutely hilarious episodes near the beginning of the trip: his very first lift, for instance, had me in stitches. The attempts to go meet Patsy Dan, the King of Tory, were funny, as were some of the eccentric characters Hawks met (and the equally eccentric things they did).

    Sadly, about midway through, the funniness began to lose its shine for me. The episodes began to get too repetitive: the same old pubs, the same old eccentric Irish (eccentric, but ultimately warm-hearted and friendly). The same old welcome with open arms because they'd heard about Hawks and his fridge on the radio. Behind a point, there was not much new that was happening, and all Hawks seemed to be doing was trying to get laid.

    Yes, it's funny—very funny—in places, and it's oddly inspirational too: it made me think, even if only for a brief mad moment, that I should attempt something at least halfway as loony. And it made me realize that sometimes all that's needed is to let go of your inhibitions and boldly go where others cringe to.

    But, eventually, just a likeable book as far as I was concerned, not absolutely fantastic all the way through.

  • Eden

    2021 bk 189. This has been on my wtr pile for a long time - seemingly almost as much time as it took for me to read it. This was not a sit down and read it through book - he met too many people along the way, so I read a bit each day. The humor was very 80's, young white male, and now a little stale. But the people - what wonderful people they were, willing to take in or give a ride to a young man with a small fridge on a trolley. His journey, the result of a bet, was made to order for a long radio station dj - who made daily calls to chart progress and involved a great deal of Ireland in participating in Tony's bet. At one point, I was willing to give up the book when he had been pontificating in a pub - but then a man in the pub came up and thanked Tony. For what? For bringing joy into people's lives, something to think about other than their daily life, the troubles in northern Ireland, the financial project - something fun and frivolous bringing joy. And for that I forgave a lot of things -and sat back to see what other joy he would bring and I ended the book smiling.

  • Carol

    This book captures a slice of life. In a way, it captures a super-concentrated life, as Tony experiences quite a lot in just a month. The book provides snapshots of the lives of all the people Tony encounters--people in bars, people who work in hotels, tourists, the radio people, the king of Tory. Tony writes about all these people in a personal way that allows us to see them, just people we would never know otherwise. And in the process, Tony forms connections with all of them. It doesn't matter if he never speaks to them again; a connection is a connection, and connections are what life is about. For a minute, for a day, for a week, Tony connected with these various people, and reading about that, to me, was inspiring.

    The book is also about embracing life and all its craziness. We all know that life is weird and sometimes will throw us some curveballs that we really didn't see coming. In this book, Tony, instead of waiting anxiously for the curveball to hit, throws himself at the pitcher, practically screaming, "HIT ME!" He experiences all the wackiness of life by going after it, realizing the beauty in it.

    The book is courageous, bold, inspiring--and of course, very, very funny. Some people choose to see it as only an entertaining comedic read, a silly stunt conducted by a wackjob with too much time on his hands. But to me it is really a lot more. It's about a funny man who embarks on something admittedly silly only to discover something much more meaningful--connections with people, the randomness of life, challenges, obstacles, support, friendship, fun, frustration, self-knowledge and insight. And, of course seeing Ireland and the Irish as never seen before!

    And, the best of all, is the snorting-root-beer-out-of-your-nose- laughter!!!!

  • Simon Mcleish

    Originally published on my blog
    here in February 2000.

    Tony Hawks once did a comedy show in Ireland, and saw the bizarre sight of someone hitch-hiking with a fridge as though this were a perfectly normal thing to do. Telling this to a group of friends back in England led to a drunken bet that he could hitch-hike all the way around Ireland in under a month, with a fridge.

    The story of the journey is amusing, but the reaction he gets is much what you would expect, bemused but genial helpfulness. There are no real surprises.

    Hawks decided to go round the Republic only, omitting Northern Ireland, for reasons which derive from the Troubles. Because of the impression gained from thirty years' worth of TV news coverage, the average English person has the idea that Northern Irish life is only about bombs and punishment beatings. When he had to travel into Armagh, he did end up in one of the more intimidating parts of Northern Ireland, among "Beware of Snipers" signs and sectarian graffiti, and this served to strengthen this opinion. I was actually living in Northern Ireland at the time of Hawks' trip, and my impression was very different. The people are really friendly, in a way which is no longer seen in England, even though the community is so divided; the grim towns (full of houses built in dark stone in depressing styles) contrast with beautiful countryside - the lakes of Fermanagh, the Antrim coast and Giant's Causeway, the Sperrin mountains.

  • Janet

    I was disappointed, really wanted to like it. I didn't laugh once-maybe British humor is beyond me, but it seemed to me he was looking down his nose at the Irish, and seemed to think they were all nutcases-this from a man trailing a mini-fridge. It would have interested me more if he wasn't a celebrity attracting attention-seems like most of his rides were pre-arranged due to the publicity. It would have been a totally different book if he'd been anonymous and actually hitched rides; he whined whenever he was forced to stand on the side of the road and actually hitchhike. And there were way too any pub visits and too little about places and people he wasn't trying to pick up or impress. I mean, getting a ride from a man whose van says 'Swan Rescue' is worthy of a chapter, but he didn't even explain what the man did to rescue swans, or even say if he had a conversation with the man. I kept thinking of what Bill Bryson would have made of it. I got the impression the whole thing was an ego trip, and I wouldn't call it travel writing. I'd give it one and a half stars, because there were a few mildly amusing bits, and an occasional interesting piece of information about history, though those were few and far between.